Publisher,
Definition of Publisher:
A person or company that prepares and issues books, journals, music, or other works for sale.
Individual or corporation responsible for the printing and distribution of digital or printed publications. Publishers also handle the marketing efforts for the publications and usually are not the creator of the material. Publishers simply serve as the intermediary between the author of the publication and the consumer market.
Synonyms of Publisher
Adviser, Announcer, Annunciator, Authority, Bibliognost, Bibliographer, Biblioklept, Bibliolater, Bibliomane, Bibliomaniac, Bibliopegist, Bibliophage, Bibliophile, Bibliopole, Bibliopolist, Bibliotaph, Bibliothec, Bibliothecaire, Bibliothecary, Book agent, Book collector, Book printer, Book publisher, Book salesman, Book-stealer, Bookbinder, Bookdealer, Booklover, Bookmaker, Bookman, Bookseller, Bookworm, Cataloger, Channel, Chief librarian, College editor, Communicant, Communicator, Copy editor, Curator, Dictionary editor, Editor, Editor-in-chief, Enlightener, Executive editor, Expert witness, Gossipmonger, Grapevine, Informant, Information center, Information medium, Informer, Interviewee, Juvenile editor, Librarian, Library director, Managing editor, Monitor, Mouthpiece, Newsmonger, Notifier, Permissions editor, Philobiblist, Press, Printer, Production editor, Public relations officer, Radio, Reference editor, Reference librarian, Reporter, Source, Spokesman, Television, Teller, Textbook editor, Tipster, Tout, Trade editor, Witness
How to use Publisher in a sentence?
- The publisher had to call the author every day for months to ensure the novel would be completed and ready for the press by the due date.
- The publisher produced a high quality print that was our new pamphlet to be distributed at the trade show next week.
- The publishers of Vogue.
- The publisher for the new textbooks increased their rates five percent, and they cited the reasoning for this due to the higher cost of raw materials.
Meaning of Publisher & Publisher Definition
Publisher
A website publisher is the person or company responsible for the content of a website. This is usually the owner of the site.
However, in some organizations, editors have a specific title or position within that organization. In these cases, the editor's responsibilities may vary, but this should generally be the more technical version of the editor. This means they have less responsibility for the quality of the content and more responsibility for making sure the site is profitable, performs well and goes live on time.
7 things you should know as an editor
- If this is your site, you are a publisher.
- Website publishers are legally responsible for their content. If you are a publisher, find out what this means in your country/state.
- Publishing a website is more than just publishing content (although that's important too)!
- There are about 1.5 billion websites in the world. However, only about 200 million of them are active.
- There are about 500 million blogs that publish 2 million posts every day. Just think what crazy competition this means for your blog!
- No less than 30% of websites are published on WordPress. This is (probably) because it's free, convenient, and flexible (and can be good for SEO too).
- Many giant companies are the publishers of various giant websites. These include traditional publishers like Condé Nast, media giants like Disney, and content companies like the Leaf Group.
A publisher is a website owner or business who is paid to advertise on their website, blog, or app. Publishers give advertisers access to their ad inventory to purchase ad space.
A website that publishes content (news, etc.) and often generates revenue by selling advertising space.
Also known as affiliate, partner, partner, reseller or information site). An independent party or website that promotes an advertiser's products or services in exchange for a commission.
Inventory source. Publishers are generally owned or controlled. Own and curated publisher receives 100% of the revenue from impressions sold. This is different from a managed publisher: a publisher that does not own inventory, but has a financial relationship with the owners.